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  • Chus Martínez

    The Complex Answer. On Art as a Nonbinary Intelligence

  • Kader Attia, Anselm Franke, Ana…

    The White West: Fascism, Unreason, and the Paradox of…

  • Marion von Osten (Aut), Lucie Kolb,…

    Material Marion von Osten 1: MoneyNations

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    CIAM ARCHIPELAGO. The Letters by Helena Syrkus

  • Anna Kornbluh

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  • Georgina Voss

    Systems Ultra. How Things, People, and Ideas Connect in a…

  • Piet Eckert, Wim Eckert (Hg.)

    Ontologie der Konstruktion. Raumwirkung in der Architektur

  • Gabrielle Schaad, Torsten Lange (eds.)

    archithese reader: Critical Positions in Search of…

  • Kersten Geers, Jelena Pancevac (eds.)

    Giancarlo de Carlo. Experiments in Thickness

  • Lauren Berlant

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  • Joanna Zylinska

    The Perception Machine

  • Alessandro Ludovico

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  • Aaron Betsky

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  • Jason McBride

    Eat Your Mind. The Radical Life and Work of Kathy Acker

  • Nóra Ó Murchú, Janez Fakin Janša (Eds.)

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  • Ingo Niermann

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    Wonderflux - A Decade of e-flux Journal

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    HaFI 020: Erika Runge: Überlegungen beim Abschied von der…

  • Natascha Sadr Haghighian, Tom Holert

    HaFI 019: Natascha Sadr Haghighian: Was ich noch nicht…

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  • Peter G. Rowe, Yoeun Chung

    Design Thinking and Storytelling in Architecture

  • Richard Weller

    To the Ends of the Earth. A Grand Tour for the 21st Century

  • François J. Bonnet, Bartolomé Sanson (…

    Spectres IV. A Thousand Voices / Mille Voix

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    Keep it Flat. A little history on flat earth

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    Objective: Earth - Designing our Planet

  • Daniel Martin Feige, Sandra Meireis (Hg…

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  • Luis Manuel Garcia-Mispireta

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  • Arnold Aronson

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  • Quentin Stevens, Kim Dovey

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  • Flavien Menu (Ed.)

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  • Matteo Pasquinelli

    The Eye of the Master. A Social History of Artificial…

  • Angelika Burtscher, Daniele Lupo

    AS IF - 16 Dialogues about Sheep, Black Holes, and Movement…

  • Anna Unterstab

    Design intersektional unter die Lupe nehmen. Gestaltung als…

  • Silvio Lorusso

    What Design Can't Do. Essays on Design and Disillusion

  • OASE Journal for Architecture #116

  • Lena Enne

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  • Ruth Duma-Coman

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  • Andrew Berardini

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    Theorie und Geschichte des Designs 2. Reaktionen auf die…

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  • Lukas Feireiss, Florian Hadler (Hg)

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  • dérive

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  • IDEA Magazine

    IDEA 404. Co-creation between AI and US

  • Johanna Mehl, Carolin Höfler (Eds)

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  • Talja Blokland

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  • Deirdre Loughridge

    Sounding Human. Music and Machines, 1740/2020

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    Berliner Hefte zu Geschichte und Gegenwart der Stadt #10.…

  • Lukas Brecheler, Lionel Esche

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  • Gianpaolo Tucci

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  • Gary Zhexi Zhang

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  • Pier Vittorio Aureli

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  • Ina Wudtke

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  • Małgorzata Bartosik

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  • Lorraine Daston

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  • Bernadette Krejs

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  • Myria Georgiou

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  • Francesca Ferrando

    The Art of Being Posthuman: Who Are We in the 21st Century?

  • Felix Dreesen, Stephan Thierbach

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    The Planetary Gentrification Reader

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    Architecture and Collective Life

  • Anthony Brand

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  • Sarah Pink, Vaike Fors, Debora Lanzeni…

    Design Ethnography: Research, Responsibilities and Futures

  • Marcelo López-Dinardi

    Architecture from Public to Commons

  • Edna Bonhomme, Alice Spawls (Eds)

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  • Philipp Oswalt

    Bauen am nationalen Haus. Architektur als Identitätspolitik

  • Samuel Clowes Huneke

    A Queer Theory of the State

  • Megan Francis Sullivan

    Megan Francis Sullivan. Oral History of Exhibitions

  • Bruno Munari

    Bruno Munari. Fantasia. Erfindung, Kreativität und…

  • Simone Jung, Steffi Hobuß, Sven Kramer

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  • Ben Schwartz (ed)

    UNLICENSED. Bootlegging As a Creative Practice

  • Rick Poynor

    Why Graphic Culture Matters

  • Katharina Sussek, Jens Müller

    PUMA - The Graphic Heritage

  • Jens Müller (Hg)

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  • Roger Behrens, Jonas Engelmann, Frank…

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  • Jonathan Cary

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  • Monica Ponce De Leon (Ed.)

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  • Ghislaine Leung

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  • Rizvana Bradley

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  • Mark Manders

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  • Peter Mörtenböck, Helge Mooshammer

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  • Jakob Claus, Petra Löffler (Eds.)

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  • George Brugmans

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  • Eric Frijters, Matthijs Ponte (Eds.)

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  • Hans-Christian Dany, Valérie Knoll

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  • McKenzie Wark

    Love and Money, Sex and Death. A Memoir

  • Cordula Daus & Charlotta Ruth

    Questionology – Are you here? Research Practices No 1

  • Maurin Dietrich, Fiona Alison Duncan

    Pippa Garner. Act Like You Know Me

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  • Stefan Wellgraf, Christine Hentschel (…

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The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things

The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things Curated by Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Leckey, "The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things" explores the theme of "techno-animism," whereby the inanimate comes to life through technology. Leckey juxtaposes contemporary art with machines, archeological objects and historical documents.
Turner Prize-winning artist Mark Leckey has curated an exhibition that explores the magical world of new technology, as well as tracing its connections to the beliefs of our distant past.
Historical and contemporary works of art, videos, machines, archaeological artefacts and iconic objects, like the giant inflatable cartoon figure of Felix the Cat – the first image ever transmitted on TV – inhabit an “enchanted landscape” created in Nottingham Contemporary’s galleries, where objects seem to be communicating with each other and with us.
In Leckey’s exhibition “magic is literally in the air.” It reflects on a world where technology can bring inanimate “things” to life. Where websites predict what we want, we can ask our mobile phones for directions and smart fridges suggest recipes, count calories and even switch on the oven. By digitising objects, it can also make them “disappear” from the material world, re-emerging in any place or era.
In this timeless exhibition, “the real and the virtual co-exist”, Leckey has said. Perhaps technology has created its own form of consciousness – an animistic future. While we already live in the realms of what used to be science fiction, we seem to have simultaneously gone back to our ancestral past – a time when ancient civilisations believed spirits inhabited plants, animals, geographic features and even objects.
Leckey’s theatre of “things” is presented in specially designed environments. Works by artists such as William Blake, Louise Bourgeois, Martin Creed, Richard Hamilton, Nicola Hicks, Jim Shaw and Tøyen are displayed alongside a medieval silver hand containing the bones of a saint, an electronic prosthetic hand
that connects with Bluetooth, a bisected 3D model of Snoopy showing his internal organs, and many other treasures that all share connections. Loosely divided into four themes or scenes – the Vegetable World, Animal Kingdom, Mankind and the Technological Domain, Leckey’s exhibition is a collection of not-so-dumb things that all talk, literally or metaphorically, to each other.


Mark Leckey
The Universal Addressability of Dumb Things
Hayward, 2013, 9781853323058